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Online Sports Betting Taxes by State, 2025

6 min readBy: Adam Hoffer, Jacob Macumber-Rosin

Legal sports betting has grown rapidly since the 2018 Supreme Court decision Murphy v. NCAA recognized the federal prohibition as unlawful, enabling states to establish legal markets. Under the previous prohibition, consumers could only bet legally in a few states, but there is now some form of legal sports betting in 40 states and the District of Columbia.

Across these states, sports betting markets vary substantially. States levy a range of different taxA tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. rates and structures, sometimes differentiating between online wagers and brick-and-mortar wagers, and access to legal sports betting can be strictly limited.

While 40 states have legalized sports wagering in some form, consumers only have statewide access to online sports betting platforms in 30 states and the District of Columbia. The highest tax rates are levied in New Hampshire, New York, Oregon, and Rhode Island at 51 percent of sportsbook revenues. Nevada and Iowa levy the lowest tax rates at 6.75 percent.

Most states levy an ad valorem tax on the revenues of sportsbook operators. Many states levy the tax on gross gaming revenues (GGR), an estimated measure of sportsbook profitability from gaming activity, prior to any deductions for operational expenses. Recently, the way in which promotional wagers affect GGR and the sportsbook taxable base has been a policy focus for several states.

A few states take a different approach to taxing sports betting activity. Tennessee levies a tax directly on the sports betting handle—the total amount wagered—and Illinois now charges an additional ad quantum fee per bet. The Oregon lottery granted DraftKings a monopoly for online sports betting in the state in exchange for the state receiving 51 percent of the sports betting proceeds. We convert these taxes to their approximate GGR levels for comparability with other states’ rates.

 

Expand or Collapse Table

Online Sports Betting Tax Revenue by State

The Latest Data, As of 2024
StateTax RatesTax Revenues
Arizona10.00%$45,298,943
Arkansas20.00%$7,830,998
Colorado10.00%$34,195,366
Connecticut13.75%$27,136,308
Delaware (a)50.00%$10,855,193
Illinois (b)50.00%$240,822,626
Indiana9.50%$48,808,977
Iowa6.75%$15,480,918
Kansas10.00%$13,495,279
Kentucky14.25%$41,339,332
Louisiana15.00%$67,090,425
Maine10.00%$5,849,814
Maryland15.00%$85,831,813
Massachusetts20.00%$133,102,917
Michigan8.40%$23,512,645
Nevada6.75%$34,330,515
New Hampshire51.00%$34,990,877
New Jersey14.25%$162,213,236
New York51.00%$1,072,376,830
North Carolina (c)18.00%$103,476,630
Ohio20.00%$189,490,281
Oregon51.00%$49,449,737
Pennsylvania36.00%$197,368,181
Rhode Island51.00%$18,245,730
Tennessee19.70%$97,427,676
Vermont31.70%$12,277,159
Virginia15.00%$92,654,093
West Virginia10.00%$5,743,175
Wyoming10.00%$1,542,737
District of Columbia (d)30.00%$18,150,286
TOTAL$2,890,388,697
Notes:
(a) Delaware began legal online sports betting on January 3.
(b) Illinois began 2024 with a 15% tax rate, then changed to a graduated rate from 20% to 40% on July 1.
(c) North Carolina began legal online sports betting on March 11.
(d) The District of Columbia began 2024 with a 10% tax rate, then changed to a rate of 30% on most online sports gambling on August 1.
Source: State statutes; LegalSportsReport

Data compiled by Adam Hoffer, Jacob Macumber-Rosin

Significant Changes Since January 1, 2024

  • Delaware began legal online sports gambling operations with a 50 percent tax rate, the 4th highest in the nation.
  • Missouri has established a tax rate on online sports gambling of 10 percent, with legal operations set to begin on December 1, 2025.
  • Illinois significantly increased the online sports gambling tax, from 15 percent to 40 percent, increasing its rank by seven positions to the 5th highest in the nation. Illinois also added a per-wager tax of up to $0.50 per wager (approximately 10 percent of GGR).
  • The District of Columbia increased the tax on online sports gambling from 20 to 30 percent.
  • New Jersey increased the tax on online sports gambling from 14.25 percent to 21.00 percent, increasing its rank by seven positions.
  • Louisiana increased the tax on online sports gambling from 15.0 to 21.5 percent.
  • Maryland increased the tax on online sports gambling from 15 to 20 percent.

Taxes are not the only burdens that gamblers and sportsbooks must bear.

Consumer access to legal betting markets is limited primarily by high barriers to entry for sports betting operators who want to offer services in the state and by limits on the geographic locations where players are allowed to place bets.

State laws and regulations erect significant barriers to entry for operators. This is often in the form of expensive licensing fees or requirements for online sportsbooks to partner with existing in-state brick-and-mortar operators. For instance, Massachusetts demands sportsbooks pay a fee of $5 million and renew that payment every five years. Sportsbooks in Pennsylvania must pay an initial fee of $10 million and a $250,000 renewal fee every five years.

New Jersey requires online sportsbook operators to partner with a brick-and-mortar racetrack or casino licensed in the state, while Ohio offers online sportsbooks the option to partner with a professional sports organization approved by the Casino Control Commission to offer mobile sports betting.

Other states require a partnership with the state lottery commission or grant control of online sports betting markets to the state lottery commission directly. Online gaming operators in Connecticut must partner with an approved master gaming operator to legally offer services. Montana monopolized all sports betting under the Montana Lottery Commission.

Whether via direct control, like in Montana, or an exclusive contract with a private operator, like in New Hampshire, states that grant a monopoly to one provider of sports betting services establish an insurmountable barrier to entry for other providers. These anticompetitive practices limit consumers’ options, which is likely to also limit the revenues states generate from sports betting taxes and economic growth from the gaming industry.

Several states also restrict where players are allowed to gamble online. In New Mexico, North Dakota, and Wisconsin, consumers are only allowed to place bets from tribal casinos. South Dakota gamblers may place bets in tribal casinos or in licensed casinos in the city of Deadwood. Mississippi and Montana only allow consumers to place bets when physically present at retail casinos or state-operated facilities.

Online wagers are treated differently from other wagers in certain states. Arizona, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and the District of Columbia tax online wagers more heavily than retail (in-person) wagers.

Establishing and taxing a legal sports betting market has been quite lucrative for states. Sports betting taxes brought in over $2.8 billion for states across the country. New York received by far the most at over $1 billion, followed by Illinois with over $240 million.

The market for sports betting will likely continue to grow substantially as more states allow legal operations or expand existing operations to online services. As the tax baseThe tax base is the total amount of income, property, assets, consumption, transactions, or other economic activity subject to taxation by a tax authority. A narrow tax base is non-neutral and inefficient. A broad tax base reduces tax administration costs and allows more revenue to be raised at lower rates. grows, tax policy design becomes increasingly important.

Optimal sports betting tax design would ensure that rates are low enough to bring consumers into legal, regulated markets rather than gambling illicitly. Restrictions on where consumers are allowed to gamble, or limits on their choices from barriers to entry like exorbitant licensure or monopoly grants, are also likely to push consumers into black markets. Illicit gambling markets also tend to be more predatory and have fewer protections for consumers, especially problem gamblers, so this aligns with public health goals as well.

Tax revenues and public benefits from legal sports gambling may be undermined by the recent change to the treatment of gambling income for federal income taxes. With only a portion of gambling losses now deductible, the unequal tax treatment threatens to drive much gambling activity to other countries or illicit markets that are not so unfairly burdened.

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